According to Vietnamese custom, this person should properly be referred to by the given name Kim Phuc.
best known as the child depicted in the Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph taken during the Vietnam War on June 8, 1972. The iconic photo taken in Trang Bang by AP photographer Nick Ut shows her at nine years of age running naked on a road after being severely burned on her back by a South Vietnamese attack.
Kim Phuc and her family were residents of the village of Trang Bang, South Vietnam. On June 8, 1972, South Vietnamese planes dropped a napalm bomb on Trang Bang, which had been attacked and occupied by North Vietnamese forces.
Audio tapes of President Richard Nixon, in conversation with his chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman in 1972, reveal that Nixon mused "I'm wondering if that was fixed" after seeing the photograph.[5] After the release of this tape, Út commented, "Even though it has become one of the most memorable images of the twentieth century, President Nixon once doubted the authenticity of my photograph when he saw it in the papers on 12 June 1972....
In 2004, Phuc spoke at the University of Connecticut about her life and experience,
On October 22, 2004, Phuc was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Law from York University in Toronto, Ontario
In 1996, Phuc gave a speech at the United States Vietnam Veterans Memorial on Veterans Day.
Dropping the "scurrilous" name-bomb "Nixon" like that is probably enough to deter lots of people from suspecting it could have been a war porn hoax. How many people associate that pic with a South Vietnamese attack by South Vietnamese planes rather than believing the Americans did it? Probably not many.